Idleness, a dog’s lot

The Rock (not the muscle-headed Hollywood Rock who doesn’t perform his own stunts but looks hard like he does) in T.S. Eliot’s play explains,

The lot of man is ceaseless labour,Or ceaseless idleness, which is still harder,Or irregular labour, which is not pleasant.

Now assuming idle here isn’t a play on idol—which, with a lit-crit cone on my head I’d argue it almost, incontestably, must be—I get this, really, in a knuckling way, a dig in my plexus; especially the difficulty of idleness, especially when the idleness in question breeds guilt. Our 0 hour contractors would surely agree with that about ‘irregular labour’ too, I haven’t met any of them, but they must, mustn’t they?

I am idle. Yes, idle. It isn’t my fault, I don’t think so anyway, I won’t take that slap in the gob. My routine is a binge of uncertainty. I wake early, read (a sort of reading. I re-read most of the lines) whilst my attention is drugged by the early morning roster of horrible American sitcoms, fuzzy and warm, a safety net cueing us when to laugh, the correct level of laugh-intensity, so we fit in—how else would we know otherwise? Every fibre of my snobbish taste rebels against the magnanimous push to be involved.

Why my dad watches these I just don’t know, they are bloody awful. One features the archetypal fat guy, who inflects his sentences, a cue for us to be hysterical, in the present tense. His wife is gorgeous of course, which dismantles the reality of the aesthetic pecking order, when, we ugly people have expended enormous energy accepting the bottom-tier ranking genetics plugged us in.

There
is 24hour news to cheer me up. I am become an inveterate consumer of all news.
I’ll even stomach the berating tactics of the indefatigable Piers Morgan, God
bless him and his uncompromising, style (?). Actually, the way that he is
programmed entertains me immensely.

Despite the exorbitant sum of money Susanna Reid receives for stomaching the patriarchal knob rash that is Piers Morgan, I can’t help but pity her. She can hold her own of course, she’s probably got a PhD in political science for all Piers might know. If you watch carefully, as I have inevitably begun to do, you can see her gnawing through her bottom lip when he folds his arms, gathers himself and starts to expound; sure she’ll draw blood one day. The live, brutal bludgeoning with a stiletto at 7:30 a.m. of Morgan, will be a good day for women, and I for one will rouse from my idle stupor and petition Reid’s release.

The
irony of this idleness is multifoliate.

First of all, looking for work these days seems to encourage idleness. I went to a local agency in town the other day & they had one job: a warehouse packer, part time, night shifts. Everything being done online, you find gob-shite jobsites, upload CV, scroll lists of a billion menial jobs you could do standing on your head, despite being worded in such a fashion as to make them sound impossible to do, and with a single click you have applied. There is endless disappointment when you look at a job for laboring only to see you need a special permit; or gardening or even data input, where you need a special qualification—as if you need a special dispensation by some ruling-body to be slow-roasted with boredom. This goes on until you start to feel disorientated, vomit in your mouth a little, collapse with such force on your keyboard a key lodges under your eyelid—what follows is rage, panic & a visit to the NHS, where a nurse will tell you off for wasting resources & time.

I
cannot adequately express in English how soul-crushing a task this is. The
inexorable sadness of it makes me loath our systems, which have infiltrated
this process because of the encouragement we tacitly approve via our reception
to convenience.

My
father has always been a hard worker. It is etched into our family’s moral
compass. I agree with it. Yet I can’t help but think that idleness is really
something I need to explore, something that might actually need to be more
encouraged in society.

I often hear people whine about work, but then before they’ve exhaled, they’ll admit how it halts any uncomfortable thoughts, helps them regulate what simmers beneath the surface of themselves: an existential crisis. Thinking is a terrible thing. This is a limit of consciousness, so people think. It is easier to complain about doing something you don’t want to do consciously or otherwise, than it is being left to be conscious of one’s human frailties. I think there is a certain idleness to be scared or unwilling to participate in your own humanity. We are estranged from animals because of our thinking, to sacrifice this for repetition is to fear the immense complexity and duty to being aware of ourselves. The irony is, the idler is potentially more inclined to this pit of existential waywardness than the hive-minded and duteous.

People
(those bloody people) these days, often ask me what I will do with myself now.
I have explained my plan to do my MA, then to work toward a PhD. Explaining
that PhD’s are funded, has on numerous occasion provoked an outcry: “Why do I
have to fund you reading books?” Some, more than makes me comfortable, think
PhD’s are funded through taxation. Terrifying isn’t it. As far as I am aware,
PhD’s are funded through universities or by businesses. It isn’t the taxpayer’s
burden. (Brief aside: these same people forget the miniscule amount of the
British budget that goes to people out of work, most of the money for the
benefits budget, goes towards pensions, some 100 odd billion.)

Ironic then that that which un-idles us establishes idleness in other areas, areas essential to our development as human beings. Therefore, it takes a daring escape into idleness, to go without the securities afforded by employment, in order to work on yourself. Eliot was onto something, who’d have thought? Because of societal resistance to this, few people are afforded the luxury of being inveterate readers, having hobbies that involve training oneself to be proficient at an art or in studious pursuits. It is in the interest of those that structure society to demonize such pursuits. I think I half believe this, I mean I don’t really think our overlords demonstrate a keen enough intellect to sully our efforts to, get smart. I do still think this was why Gove said what he said about nobody wanting to listen to experts, and why education is no longer hailed as the cornerstone-decision of every school leaver. Plenty of statistics have been produced on how much more money non-graduates are paid than graduates—Google it. What is never remarked, is how little a properly educated person really wants. Maybe I am sheltered by my own requirements and a few I know, who manage with so little and while not exactly happy, probably wouldn’t trade what they have figured out for flash cars and holidaying twice a year. Puerile aren’t we. Daft. Stubborn. Doomed to a life of misery, to be sexless, saggy, ugly, useless: human.

It
is complicated. Everything is. Idleness simplifies. While I am not open to an
extended period of doing nothing, I will try to make the most of my current
idleness. Everyone’s doing something, a lot of those doers are making a right
pig’s ear of what they do, I don’t see how it can hurt to just stop being a
doer for a while and watch what’s going on.

There
is in idleness the sensation of feeling invisible; I could do with disappearing
for a while.

Advertisements

Share this:

Like this:

Related

After living in Korea for shy a decade, I find myself back in England, penalized for my turned back, awaiting a move to Exeter, where I will study an MA in English, with focus on environmental studies. These days I am reading inveterately, owing to my no longer living without the means to buy books & books & books. My reading interest lie in contemporary philosophy, ecology, ecological philosophy, object orientated ontology & speculative realism. These ideas are leaching into my poetry & essays.

Post navigation

12 Comments

People only accuse others of being idle when the body is idle. Having an active mind is not idleness, and is as hard as manual labour, but to the common working class this is not so. So if one is accused of being idle for looking out the window and searching one’s soul for a connection between what they see and feel, and how that will drive them forward after such a major life change as the one you just went through, don’t worry. Inevitably you will find that critics of this “idleness” are actually jealous of the fact you have this time/difficult freedom, as it beats whatever it is they have to grind through every day. You will be surprised how much the emotion of jealousy drives the Protestant work ethic! “Real” work is physical misery. Emotional misery (and the time it takes to sort it out) is not “valid” or even “real.” If you are not rubbing your sore back after stacking cans at Tesco’s for half a day, you aren’t in the realm of the actual! LOL!

Anything can be hard work if one hates it. I used to deeply love practicing the saxophone for 6 to 10 hours a day, when I was young and on a major quest to emulate Michael Brecker. I would be completely miserable a mere 10 minutes into that same quest now if I were forced into it. You were born to write… let stacking cans or looking out windows be your muse! 🙂

I so deeply identify with your musings, and share your laments. Also, I’m a little in love with you for your insult-slinging prowess (which isn’t exactly a pay check, I realize, but should count for something…): Piers Morgan IS a patriarchal knob rash! Lol! Bless you, my friend!

Worthy musings, Daniel. Wish I could say I thought education was simple now. When a lot of my life was studies, I did think it was simple, but you can’t go back.

Back then, I remember being with a close friend at someone’s house, she’d just moved in and we were manual labour to arrange the furniture. The TV was being debated (all there was in those days). My friend said, “Turn it to face the wall.” Of course we didn’t, but his words have stuck with me through the decades.

Yeah, TV is something that I think many of us would like to rebel against. I know when I move away in September I won’t purchase a TV & will return to watching lectures on Youtube. Because my family only watch TV, I do, to just be with them.

“ There, I am desperately free and naive; but knowing this oh dear happiness, dear misery; there is no distinctive sign except that one tearing one’s heart, and a smile destined to nobody(...)" E.Stachura